There's a lot more to redox than is addressed in the syllabus, and what is there isn't covered well.
Oxidation states give you a good idea of what is likely to oxidise or reduce, by looking at what is present in unusual oxidation states.
Potassium permanganate, KMnO
4, has K
+, Mn
7+, and O
2-... the manganese(VII) is readily reducible as it gains electrons and goes to a more typical oxidation state.
Hydrogen peroxide, H
2O
2, has H
+ and O
-. Typically, one would expect the oxygen to be reduced to its oxide ion form, O
2-, but it can also be oxidised to return to oxygen gas with the oxygen atoms in oxidation state 0. The potential for oxygen to be oxidised and reduced from the form in the peroxide ion is seen in the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide:
2 H2O2 (aq) --------> 2 H2O (l) + O2 (g)
In this disproportionation decomposition, one O atom in each hydrogen peroxide molecule is oxidised and end up in the oxygen gas, whilst the other O atom is reduced and ends up in its -2 state in a water molecule.
A more comprehensive list of standard reduction potentials will include:
- permanganate to manganese(II) under acidic conditions at +1.51 V
- permanganate to manganese(IV) oxide under neutral / basic conditions at +0.60 V
- oxygen to hydrogen peroxide under acidic conditions at +0.695 V
- hydrogen peroxide to water under acidic conditions at +1.763 V
- potassium ions to potassium metal at -2.93 V - showing that reduction of potassium ions certainly won't happen, which is hardly surprising given potassium metal reacts violently with water.
These suggest the acidic conditions answer will be highly favourable, but don't give a clear answer on the neutral / alkaline conditions... but then, the HSC syllabus barely touches redox not under acidic conditions. Whether you need to be able to take processes like
MnO4- to Mn2+
or
CH2CH2OH to CH3COOH
and convert them to balanced half-equations is not clear - though the skill is useful - but extending it to addressing neutral or alkaline conditions seems improbable.